Saturday, April 4, 2020

Portugal gives Migratns residents right equal to the portuguese

Migrants in Portugal will be treated as  residents of portuguese until at least 1 July to ensure they have access to public services during the Covid-19 outbreak.
Applicants including asylum seekers need only provide evidence of an ongoing request to qualify - granting them access to the national health service, welfare benefits, bank accounts, and work and rental contracts.

Claudia Veloso, spokeswoman for the Ministry of Internal Affairs, told “People should not be deprived of their rights to health and public service just because their application has not yet been processed,”  She said,“In these exceptional times, the rights of migrants must be guaranteed.”
The policy also aims to reduce contagion risk by minimizing contact between border control service staff and applicants, the statement said.

Saturday, September 1, 2018

Portuguese consulates overseas to accept documentation in other languages

Portuguese consulates overseas to accept documentation in other languages
and the validity of the national Citizen’s Card has been extended from five years to 10 years.

Portuguese consulates in foreign countries are soon to start accepting documents in English, Spanish and French, meaning citizens will no longer need to embark on the costly process of getting their paperwork translated.

The move was announced last week by the State Secretary for Communities, José Luís Carneiro, during a visit to mark Emigrant’s Day in the northern Portuguese municipality of Murça.
The measure is also designed to make consular proceedings simpler and speedier.
During his visit to Murça last Friday, José Luís Carneiro highlighted another measure that also facilitates the relationship of Portuguese residents abroad with consular branches: the validity of the national Citizen’s Card has been extended from five years to 10 years.
“This means holders will not have to go to consular branches as often”, José Luís Carneiro said.

Friday, September 2, 2016

Portugal voted friendliest country in Europe

Portugal voted friendliest country in Europe


Portugal has been ranked Europe’s friendliest country and the 10th friendliest country in the world on a list lead by Taiwan.
This conclusion was drawn from a survey in which more than 14,000 people from 191 different countries took part. The survey was conducted by website International in which opinions were sought from people living outside their country of birth, to find out which are the friendliest countries to live in. 
Participants were asked to evaluate their satisfaction with quality of life, ability to integrate, financial situation, work environment and family life in their adopted countries. Portugal topped the list of most welcoming European countries, and was ranked 10th on the list of worldwide countries, which was lead by Taiwan.
At the very bottom of the list, as the world’s most unfriendly countries, are the Czech Republic, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait.

Monday, August 8, 2016

Fire in car park of dance festival destroys 422 vehicles

Fire in car park of dance festival destroys 422 vehicles

IN NEWS ·


A fire that spread through a parking lot near a large festival in Portugal’s central interior yesterday completely destroyed 422 vehicles and damaged a further nine.

Around 4,000 festival-goers were advised to vacate the venue as a precaution. Fire-fighters brought the blaze under control in just over an hour with no victims to report.

Spread over 48 hectares the Andanças dance and music festival in Castelo de Vide in Portalegre expects to welcome some 40,000 visitors by Sunday.

GNR police are investigating the cause of the fire.

Quality of Portugal tap water is international 'level of excellence'

Portugal tap water quality at international 'level of excellence'

BY TPN/ LUSA, 
The quality of tap water in Portugal is excellent, according to international criteria, with 99% of good quality around the whole country, an official for the national regulatory agency for the sector, ERSAR, said on Thursday.
"We have gone from very good quality to a situation of excellence, and in 2015 we achieved for the first time 99% safe water, which is a criterion considered internationally to be a level of excellence," Luís Simas, the director of the agency's Quality Department, told Lusa. Simas, who was speaking after the release of the annual report on "Quality Control for Water for Human Consumption" for 2015, explained that where infringements are detected, 80% are pointers to a need for improvement in ways that do not directly affect health. Instead, they "function as a warning so that suitable measures are taken to avoid the situation worsening."


Most of such situations, he added, "are in the interior of the country, in smaller supply areas, and less along the coast and in densely inhabited areas."The remaining infringements are "related to compulsory parameters [and happen] occasionally, because of characteristics of the origin of the water or because the treatment did not function with the efficiency that it should have," he said. When these are detected, "the managing entity is obliged to correct them".

Last year, more than half a million analyses were carried out, with 330 left uncompleted. That, Simas said, is in line with previous years and means that controls are still being done "with great rigour and with results that make it possible to have a very precise and exact idea of the quality of tap water".

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Portugal’s SEF immigration office has announced call of strike

Immigration officials call of strike

IN NEWS ·

The union for Portugal’s SEF immigration office has announced in a statement that it had called off a strike planned for later this month.

Industrial action had been called for 11 and 12 August but the union said it was convinced to cancel the potentially crippling strike after the Home Affairs minister and the SEF director pledged to address the grievances of workers by the end of September.

Monday, August 1, 2016

Earthquake in Portugal


IN NEWS ·

An earthquake measuring 4.0 on the Richter scale was registered off the Algarve coast Monday morning.Information from the Portuguese Met office states that so far there are no reports of the quake having been felt.


The tremor happened at 4.48am and its epicentre was pinpointed at around 110 kilometres south of the coast of Faro.

An earthquake measuring 3.5 on the Richter scale was also registered on Sunday in the areas of Cadaval, Óbidos and Peniche, along Portugal's west coast.